THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case no: 084/2025
In the matter between:
GANES ANIL RAMDHIN APPELLANT
and
RONDEBOSCH MEDICAL CENTRE (PTY) LTD RESPONDENT
Neutral citation: Ramdhin v Rondebosch Medical Centre (Pty) Ltd (084/2025)
[2026] ZASCA 93 (29 June 2026)
Coram: MOCUMIE, SCHIPPERS, HUGHES and KOEN JJA and
ZILWA AJA
Heard: 19 May 2026
Delivered: This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation
to the parties’ representatives by email, publication on the Supreme Court of
Appeal website and released to SAFLII. The date and time for hand -down of the
judgment is deemed to be 11h00 on 29 June 2026.
Summary: Contract – for admission privileges to hospital – medical
practitioner found guilty of unprofessional conduct and suspended from practice –
effect of s 44 of the Health Professions Act 56 of 1974 – whether admission
privileges terminated – registration and qualification to practi se a term of the
contract implied by law – practitioner not entitled to interdict.
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ORDER
On appeal from: Western Cape Division of the High Court, Cape Town (Manca
AJ, sitting as a court of first instance):
The appeal is dismissed with costs.
JUDGMENT
Koen JA (Mocumie, Schippers and Hughes JJA and Zilwa AJA concurring)
Introduction
[1] This is an appeal from a decision of the Western Cape Division of the High
Court, Cape Town (the high court), which dismissed an application by the
appellant, Dr Ganes Anil Ramdhin (Dr Ramdhin), a medical practitioner, for
certain relief against the respondent, Rondebosch Medical Centre (Pty) Ltd (RMC).
Dr Ramdhin sought an interdict to enforce a contract in terms of which he was
granted admission privileges as an obstetrician and gyn aecologist at RMC. The
interdict was to operate pending the determination of various claims for declaratory
relief, sought in the second part of the application , including an order that the
termination of Dr Ramdhin’s admission privileges was invalid. The appeal is with
the leave of the high court.
Background
Admission privileges
[2] Medical practitioners do not automatically enjoy rights to have their patients
admitted to hospitals of their choice. These rights, known as admission privileges,
must be obtained contractually from a hospital. In return for granting admission
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privileges to a medical practitioner, the hospital benefits financially from th e
admission of the practitioner’s patients and their use of its facilities.
[3] There is a process for obtaining admission privileges. The process may vary
between hospitals. Generally, the process begins with an application to the hospital
accompanied by supporting documents, such as proof of qualifications, proof of
registration with the Health Professions Council of South Africa (the HPCSA), and
references. Thereafter, the application is reviewed to verify the practitioner’s
qualifications, training, and professional experience , followed by a possible
interview to assess the practitioner’s suitability for admission privileges. Th e
process includes: reviewing case histories ; evaluating the practitioner’s
professional conduct and reputation; approval of the application by the hospital’s
medical advisory committee or an equivalent committee; and a recommendation
regarding the application to the hospital.
[4] Admission privileges are typically granted through a written agreement that
sets out the terms and conditions under which the practitioner may admit and treat
patients at the hospital. The privileges are usually subject to periodic renewal and
re-evaluation to ensure that the medical practitioner continues to meet the
hospital’s standards and maintains the required professional qualifications.
The provisions of the Health Professions Act
[5] The Health Professions Act 56 of 1974 (the Act) requires all medical
practitioners to be registered with the HPCSA. Upon meeting the requirements of
the Act, the Registrar of the HPCSA issues a registration certificate to the
practitioner, authorising practice in the health profession for which registration was
applied. Section 39 of the Act provides that no person shall perform acts pertaining
to any health profession unless registered under the Act. A contravention of this
prohibition constitutes a criminal offence.
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[6] A medical practitioner found guilty of unprofessional conduct by the
HPCSA may, inter alia, be suspended from practice. In that event, s 19A(3)
provides that, as of the date of issue of the notice of suspension by the Registrar
and receipt thereof by the practitioner, any registration certificate issued in terms
of the Act is deemed to be suspended. The practitioner must immediately cease to
practise within the health profession in respect of which they are registered and to
perform any act that they are entitled to perform , until the suspension of their
registration is lifted.
The position of Dr Ramdhin
[7] Dr Ramdhin qualified as a specialist obstetrician and gynaecologist and was
issued with a registration certificate by the HPCSA . He enjoyed admission
privileges in terms of an agreement concluded with RMC from October 2019 (the
2019 agreement) . At the time, RMC was represented by Dr Nisar Moosa (Dr
Moosa), then its sole shareholder. The admission privileges at RMC were obtained
informally and did not require a written application. Apart from the basic terms
relating to the grant of admission privileges set out above, Dr Ramdhin’s founding
affidavit is silent on any further terms and conditions of the 2019 agreement.
[8] Dr Ramdhin exercised the privileges until he was found guilty of
unprofessional conduct and suspended from practice by the HPCSA in June 2023.
He pleaded guilty to two charges of unprofessional conduct concerning two
patients whom he had treated in August and May 2020. These charges included
performing procedures without adequate pre -operative work -up; performing a
futile operation on a patient; and failing to provide the patient with adequate post-
operative care. He was suspended from the register of practitioners for three years,
with two years suspended for a further three-year period on condition that he is not
found guilty of similar unprofessional conduct during the period of suspension, and
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that he practises under an HPCSA-approved supervisor to mentor him during that
period.
[9] During Dr Rhamdhin’s suspension and cessation of practice, the shareholder
ownership and management structures of RMC changed. Dr Moosa no longer
owned any shares in RMC, but remained as a director on the RMC Board.
[10] By 1 May 2024, RMC had established a Physicians Advisory Board (PAB),
and a more formal policy (the policy) was implemented to regulate the process for
conferring admission privileges on medical practitioners. The policy required, inter
alia, that the medi cal practitioner: complete and submit a standard application
form; possess a valid identity document and a formal qualification registered with
the HPCSA; be in active status on the HPCSA practitioner register; and
demonstrate competency and proficiency in their specialty or area of practice, as
per peer-evaluation. The PAB and the hospital’s management team would review
an applicant’s credentials and qualifications and recommend the appropriate level
of privileges for the practitioner, having regard to their specialty, training,
experience, and competency.
[11] The policy provides that RMC has the right to suspend, revoke, or modify
admission privileges granted to health care practitioners in cases of non -
compliance with hospital policies and standard operating procedures, ethical
misconduct, substandard clinical performance, action taken against the practitioner
by a governing body, or any other reason deemed appropriate by the PAB and
hospital management. The PAB serves as an advisory body, and the final decision
rests with the Board. Key factors to consider whe n deciding whether to grant
admission privileges include the following: the need for the practitioner's services;
the commercial viability of granting admission privileges to the practitioner; and
the practitioner's professional development within RMC.
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[12] Dr Ramdhin says that during his suspension, several of his colleagues,
including Dr Moosa and a former hospital manager, Mr Moonsamy, asked him
about his return to RMC. He also remained liable for the rent of his consulting
rooms. He obviously could not return to RMC during the first year of his
suspension. That period ended on 23 May 2024. But he believed he could return to
RMC thereafter.
[13] On 31 May 2024, Dr Ramdhin received a letter from RMC ’s hospital
manager advising that, given his suspension, the following conditions had to be
met before he could admit patients to RMC again: his HPCSA suspension had to
be officially lifted; he was required to submit proof of the upliftment of his
suspension; and he had to apply for admission privileges (which application would
be peer-group reviewed and considered, as set out above). If the PAB approved his
application for admission privileges, the hospital management would meet w ith
him to discuss theatre times and the admission process.
[14] Dr Ramdhin thereafter successfully applied to the HPCSA to have his
suspension lifted, and his registration was reinstated. He was permitted by the
HPCSA to resume practice as an obstetrician and gynaecologist from 3 June 2024.
This w as subject to the conditions relating to the remaining period of the
suspension, including the requirement that he be supervised.
[15] In anticipation of the RMC board meeting to be held on 18 June 2024, Dr
Moosa requested that the Board consider reinstating Dr Ramdhin’s admission
privileges. Although no written application for privileges had been submitted by
Dr Ramdhin at that stage, the Board nevertheless considered Dr Moosa’s request.
[16] The Board, in the exercise of its discretion, resolved not to grant admission
privileges to Dr Ramdhin. The refusal was informed by the following: there was
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neither a medical nor financial need for an additional obstetrician/gyn aecologist;
several other hospitals in close proximity could serve the area and its patients; there
were allegations of unprofessional conduct against Dr Ramdhin that were widely
reported in the media; he had been sanctioned by the HPCSA; permitting him to
practise at RMC would cause RMC severe reputational harm; and RMC ’s
professional insurance premiums were likely to increase by having a doctor ‘of
risk’ practising there.
[17] On 29 June 2024, Dr Moosa, in an email to RMC's Chief Operating Officer,
Mr Morné Weideman, requested that the Board reconsider its decision. On 1 July
2024, Dr Ramdhin submitted a written application for admission privileges. On 3
July 2024, in a letter to RMC inquiring about progress, Dr Ramdhin stated that he
had submitted the application to be considered for the continuation of his admission
privileges, and not as a new practitioner, who would be required to apply or reapply
for such privileges. He had not expressed such a qualification when he submitted
the written application for admission privileges.
[18] On 9 July 2024, the PAB met to consider Dr Ramdhin’s application for
admission privileges. It declined to decide his application.
[19] On 11 July 2024, Dr Ramdhin’s attorneys demanded that the privileges he
enjoyed pursuant to the 2019 agreement , be reinstated immediately . RMC’s
attorneys, on 5 August 2024, replied that his admission privileges had terminated
when the HPCSA suspended him from the list of registered medical practitioners
in June 2023; that his reinstatement on the register did not revive his admission
rights; and that the Board had resolved not to grant him admission privileges.
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The high court application
[20] On 20 August 2024, Dr Ramdhin launched an urgent application seeking, in
Part A thereof, that a rule nisi be issued calling upon RMC to show cause why an
interim order should not issue ‘interdicting and restraining [it] from implementing
a decision to prevent [him] from exercising his contractual rights ( known as
“admission privileges”) as an obstetrician and gynaecologist at the premises of the
[RMC] pending the determination of the relief sought in Part B’. Part B sought
declaratory relief : that the purported termination of D r Ramdhin’s contractual
rights to admission privileges was invalid and of no force and effect ; that he has
legal standing to advance a case on behalf of his current and future patients; that
the purported termination of his contractual rights (the decision) was administrative
action which infringed on the constitutional rights of his patients , inter alia , to
access healthcare; and that the decision be reviewed and set aside under the
provisions of the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA).
[21] Dr Ramdhin’s principal argument was that the 2019 agreement was never
lawfully terminated and that he retained a contractual right to exercise those
privileges after his registration was suspended. This contention warrants a closer
examination of the terms of the 2019 agreement.
[22] RMC’s defence was that the 2019 agreement contained a term implied by
law that Dr Ramdhin’s privileges would terminate if he was no longer able to
practise his profession. Accordingly, when he was suspended and his registration
was deemed cancelled, the admission privileges terminated. Further, that RMC
took no decision to terminate the privileges which would constitute ‘administrative
action’ as envisaged in PAJA.
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[23] The application came before the high court only with respect to interim
relief. The high court however, decided that the admission privileges were
terminated as a result of a term implied by law, which it viewed as an issue that
had been fully argued. The effect of the term is that if Dr Ramdhin was suspended
from practice, or if his registration was cancelled under the Act , his admission
privileges would terminate. Concerning the alternative argument based on PAJA,
the court held that no decision was taken to terminate the admission privileges; and
that, if there was such a decision, it would not constitute administrative action and
thus not be reviewable. It dismissed the application with costs.
A new point
[24] Shortly before th is appeal was to be heard, Dr Ramdhin’s counsel gave
notice that he intended to argue a new point that the principles regarding temporary
impossibility of performance found application on the facts of this case. The parties
filed supplementary heads of argument and addressed the Court on this issue.
[25] The new point may be raised for the first time on appeal and decided, in the
discretion of this Court: if it involves no unfairness to the other party; if the point
is fully covered in the pleadings; if it does not raise new factual issues not fully
explored in the court a quo; and if it does not rely on a factual foundation not laid
in the court a quo.1 This list is not exhaustive.
[26] Dr Ramdhin’s case was that the 2019 agreement had not terminated but
continued despite his suspension by the HPCSA, and that, to the extent that his
suspension constituted a breach of the contract, RMC had an election to cancel the
contract within a reasonable period but had not done so. He did not plead that his
suspension constituted a temporary supervening impossibility, that the contractual
1 Paddock Motors (Pty) Ltd v Igesund 1976 (3) SA 16 (A) at 23D. See also Quartermark Investments (Pty) Ltd v
Mkhwanazi and Another [2013] ZASCA 150; [2014] 1 All SA 22 (SCA); 2014 (3) SA 96 (SCA) para 20.
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obligations were suspended by operation of contract law, rather than in terms of
the Act, or that the requirements of temporary impossibility were satisfied. 2 The
high court determined the matter on the pleaded issues. It did not consider
temporary supervening impossibility of performance.
[27] The argument based on temporary supervening impossibility of performance
seeks to replace the legal foundation of Dr Ramdhin’s case. It would require a fact-
sensitive inquiry and a value judgment, based on objective criteria, as to whether it
is just and equitable that the contract, to the extent still possible, be upheld and the
parties’ respective obligations adjusted accordingly. In Transnet Ltd t/a National
Ports Authority v Owner of the MV Snow Crystal (MV Snow Crystal),3 this Court
explained that in relation to impossibility of performance, in each case, it is
necessary to consider the nature of the contract, the relationship of the parties, the
circumstances of the case, and the nature of the impossibility invoked . This is
necessary to determine whether the general rule that impossibility of performance
due to vis maior (a superior force) or casus fortuitous (a chance occurrence) will
excuse performance, ought to be applied in the particular circumstances of each
case.
[28] Dr Ramdhin’s approach is novel in that he not only seeks to rely on his own
conduct, which made it impossible for him to comply with the 2019 agreement, to
excuse his performance during his suspension, but also to preserve a right to
admission privileges after the suspension. The onus is on him to establish any such
right to specific performance.
2 World Leisure Holidays (Pty) Ltd v Georges 2002 (5) SA 531 (W) para 10.
3 Transnet Ltd t/a National Ports Authority v Owner of MV Snow Crystal (MV Snow Crystal) [2008] ZASCA 27;
2008 (4) SA 111 (SCA); [2008] 3 All SA 255 (SCA) para 28.
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[29] Temporary impossibility of performance cannot be determined in the
abstract but requires a court to evaluate whether performance was objectively
impossible, rather than merely impermissible or inconvenient; how the contract
allocated the risk of interruption resulting from a professional suspension; whether
the impediment was truly temporary in the contractual sense; and whether post -
impediment performance would remain substantially the same as the performance
contracted for. Because the case was never adva nced as one of temporary
impossibility, no evidence was directed to those issues; no findings were made by
the high court; and RMC was never called upon to meet that case. 4 RMC’s
evidential and legal response would necessarily have been different had the issue
of impossibility of performance been squarely raised. Furthermore, this Court is
asked to make first‐instance determinations, contrary to its appellate function.5
[30] Raising the issue of ‘impossibility of performance’ for the first time on
appeal is prejudicial to RMC and impermissible. In any event, the principles of
temporary impossibility do not arise on the facts of this matter. The impossibility
was not due to an unforeseen act but from Dr Ramdhin’s culpable and admitted
professional misconduct. In MV Snow Crystal,6 this Court held that the doctrine of
‘impossibility’, whether temporary or otherwise, will not avail a party seeking to
rely on it if the impossibility is self-created.
Discussion
[31] The high court’s order dismissing the application with costs applies to the
entire application, the judgment is therefore final in form and effect, because if the
term implied by law – that admission privileges can be enjoyed only by registered
practitioners qualified to practise their profession – forms part of the 2019
4 Molusi and Others v Voges N O and Others [2016] ZACC 6; 2016 (3) SA 370 (CC) paras 27-28.
4 Molusi and Others v Voges N O and Others [2016] ZACC 6; 2016 (3) SA 370 (CC) paras 27-28.
5 DB v CB [2024] ZACC 9; 2024 (8) BCLR 1080 (CC); 2024 (5) SA 335 (CC) paras 31, 42, 50, 52 -57, and 61.
6 Footnote 3 above para 28.
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agreement, then Dr Ramdhin’s suspension from practice brought that agreement to
an end. A further consequence is that he would not be entitled to the relief sought
in Part B of the notice of motion. Counsel for Dr Ramdhin agreed that this is the
legal position and that his client’s only remedy lay in the appeal to this Court.
[32] For these reasons, it is unnecessary to consider the question whether the
relief sought by Dr Rhamdin in Part A of the notice of motion is an interim or a
final interdict. It is also unnecessary to consider the PAJA review. Dr Ramdhin’s
counsel rightly did not pursue this issue. Whether a medical practitioner enjoys
admission privileges is a matter of private law: their termination does not constitute
administrative action as contemplated in PAJA. Consequently, the only issue to be
decided is whether the high court was correct in holding that the 2019 agreement
came to an end upon Dr Ramdhin’s suspension and disqualification from practice,
because, as the court put it, ‘[a]dmission privileges can only be exercised by
medical practitioners who are entitled to practise’.
[33] Dr Ramdhin did not identify the terms of the 2019 agreement on which he
relies, save to contend that the admission privileges are a contractual right. Dr
Ramdhin contends that the grant of admission privileges was indefinite ; and that
his inability to exercise them during his suspension merely constituted a temporary
impossibility of compliance with his obligations under the agreement. Therefore,
so it is contended, when the period of suspension expired, the exercise of admission
privileges simply continued as before. Dr Ramdhin emphasised that his registration
as a medical practitioner had merely been suspended and that this was different
from a sanction of removal from the register.
[34] In this regard, Dr Ramdhin relied on s 44 of the Act. It provides:
‘Every person who has been suspended or whose name has been removed from the register in
‘Every person who has been suspended or whose name has been removed from the register in
terms of section 42 shall, if his or her profession is one which, under this Act, cannot be lawfully
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practised by an unregistered person, be disqualified from practising his or her profession and his
or her registration certificate shall be deemed to be cancelled until the period of suspension has
expired or until his or her name has been restored to the register by the professional board.’
[35] It is settled that statutory construction is a unitary exercise of text, context
and purpose; and that the starting point is the language of the provision. Regarding
the construction of s 44 of the Act, c ounsel for Dr Ramdhin conceded that if his
sanction had been removal from the register, his admission privileges would have
come to an end , because he would no longer be a health professional . The
supervening impossibility will mean that the performance of his contractual duties
was not possible . By contrast, so it was submitted, where a practitioner is
suspended, the Act prescribes the consequences for the practitioner while leaving
his name on the register, which ‘is a preservation of the status quo’, with the only
consequence being that for a period he cannot perform his contractual duties.
[36] However, this is incorrect and a misreading of s 44 of the Act, as counsel
was driven to concede. In both cases of removal and suspension from the register,
the practitioner is disqualified from practising his profession and consequently,
performance of his contractual duties is not possible. The only difference is that in
the case of suspension, the registration certificate is deemed to be cancelled until
expiry of the period of suspension or until the practitioner’s name has been restored
to the register. In other words, a medical practitioner’s qualification to practise his
profession is a prerequisite for the grant and continued existence of admission
privileges.
[37] This is not, as Dr Ramdhin contends, a simple case of a suspension and an
automatic entitlement to resume practice after a year, as if nothing significant had
automatic entitlement to resume practice after a year, as if nothing significant had
happened in the interim. His suspension fundamentally altered the basis of the 2019
agreement. He was disqualified from p ractising medicine for a year . He was no
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longer an independent, autonomous service provider and would not return as one,
but rather as a strictly supervised medical practitioner, stripped of the independent
clinical autonomy for which RMC had contracted . He was now subject to
mandatory HPCSA-approved oversight, after a one-year operational vacuum, and
exposed to a three -year period of heightened contractual risk and reputational
prejudice. The underlying contractual substratum of the 2019 agreement thus
disappeared. His suspension is not a brief, transient disruption, such as a temporary
illness or a brief absence from office, but a structural prohibition on independent
professional practice.
[38] The premise that Dr Ramdhin would provide autonomous, continued,
uninterrupted independent professional services came to an end with his
suspension. If it was contractually intended that Dr Ramdhin could continue with
his admission privileges, notwithstanding the suspension, he should have pleaded
and established such a term. RMC, as an innocent party, cannot be required to await
speculative future compliance, or be compelled to accept a fundamentally different
contractual regime, under the guise of temporary impossibility of performance.
[39] As a matter of law, where the essential nature of the obligations had changed
to the point that the foundation of the contract has fallen away or been
fundamentally altered, the original contract cannot merely ‘continue’. Dr Ramdhin
did not contend before the high court that it was within the parties’ contemplation
or reasonably foreseeable at the time of the conclusion of the 2019 agreement that
he would be suspended or subject to a fundamentally altered professional regimen,
that RMC had assumed the risk of a temporary impossibility of performance arising
from any suspension he might suffer, or that there was a tacit assumption that such
a risk should be imported into the contract.
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[40] If Dr Ramdhin were to enjoy admission privileges again, the parties would
need to enter into a new contract. Such a contract would have to be consistent with
the policy that applied in May 2024.
[41] Contractual terms are express, implied, or tacit. The term ‘implied’ refers to
terms implied by law, but at times, depending on the context, also to consensual
terms silently implied between the parties (really tacit terms). Implied terms may
derive from the common law, precedent, trade usage, custom, or statute and exist
irrespective of the presence or absence of consensus between the parties, but are
imposed by law on the contracting parties. Once recognized, an implied term
applies to all contracts, if of general application, or to contracts of a specific class,
unless explicitly excluded by the parties. An implied term may always be
developed by a court in the exercise of its inherent power, having regard to the
requirements of justice, reasonableness, fairness, and good faith.7
[42] The suspension cancelled the right conferred by registration. The
cancellation remained in effect until the suspension was lifted. During that time,
the registration is, as a matter of law, regarded as cancelled, not merely suspended.
[43] The provisions of the Act make it clear that upon suspension, a practitioner
must immediately cease to practise until the suspension of registration is lifted.
Because admission privileges may be exercised only by a practitioner entitled to
practise, the r ight to practise is an essential term of the agreement conferring
admission privileges and one of its naturalia. When admission privileges are
deemed cancelled upon suspension, they fall away by operation of law and cannot
be exercised. As a consequence, once Dr Ramdhin was no longer able to practise,
7 Van Nieuwkerk v McCrae 2007 (5) SA 21 (W) at 27A-C.
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his admission privileges could not be exercised, and the 2019 agreement
establishing those privileges was terminated.
[44] The legal fact that his entitlement to practise was suspended, even
temporarily, does not mean that his admission privileges remained extant but were
simply suspended until he was again entitled to practise. During the period of his
suspension, RMC might have required the services of an obstetrician/gynaecologist
and might have had to replace him with another practitioner.
[45] Dr Ramdhin has not established that the high court erred in finding that the
2019 agreement was subject to an implied term, following from the application of
the provisions of the Act and as a conclusion of law, that the admission privileges
terminated on his suspension. Having regard to the purpose for which admission
privileges are granted in the professional relationship between Dr Ramdhin and
RMC, those privileges terminated automatically when he was no longer permitted
or registered to practi se as a me dical practitioner. No decision was required. Dr
Ramdhin w as required to reapply for such privileges after his re instatement
following the expiry of his suspension.
[46] The fact that Dr Ramdhin continued to rent his consulting rooms and was
invoiced for the rental amounts is of no consequence. The landlord, Stone-fountain
Properties (Pty) Ltd, is unrelated to RMC.
[47] Dr Ramdhin has not asserted that he held any right to admission privileges
other than under the 2019 agreement. By 1 May 2024, a new policy and
dispensation were in place. The letter of 31 May 2024 made it clear that he had to
reapply for admission privile ges. By submitting an application for admission
privileges on 1 July 2024, he clearly accepted, despite his subsequent protestations
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to the contrary, that he was required to apply because he no longer enjoyed
admission privileges and had to be approved for any privileges de novo (afresh).
[48] In light of the above conclusion, it is unnecessary to consider the further
requirements for an interim interdict. I simply note that the application papers also
lack any allegations that admission privileges had been sought unsuccessfully at
other hospita ls and that Dr Ramdhin would not have available to him and his
patients a satisfactory alternative remedy.
Order
[49] The following order is accordingly granted:
The appeal is dismissed with costs.
______________________
P A KOEN
JUDGE OF APPEAL
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Appearances
For the appellant: S Kirk-Cohen SC
Instructed by: Mcaciso Standsfield Inc., Cape Town
Kramer Weihmann Inc., Bloemfontein
For the respondent: M Adhikari
Instructed by: Motsoeneng Bill Attorneys Inc., Sandton
Honey Attorneys, Bloemfontein.